The Internet Reputation Bill of Rights

Your fundamental rights as a user of MIR. These principles guide everything we build.

  1. You own your reputation data

    Your reputation belongs to you, not to us or any platform. You have full ownership of the data that represents your online identity and trustworthiness.

  2. You control who sees it

    You decide which platforms and partners can access your reputation signals. No one can query your data without your authorization.

  3. You can export it anytime

    Your reputation data is portable. You can export it in standard formats and take it with you, ensuring you're never locked in.

  4. You can challenge errors

    If you believe your reputation contains inaccurate information, you have the right to dispute it and have errors corrected through a fair process.

  5. You will never be judged in secret

    MIR doesn't score or rate you. We only record verified events that partners submit. You see exactly what's in your history—no hidden factors, no secret judgments.

  6. Your identity is not a product

    We do not sell your data. We do not monetize your identity. You are not the product — you are the user we serve.

  7. Your trust signal cannot be bought

    Reputation is earned through actions, not purchased. No one can pay to artificially inflate their trustworthiness or damage yours.

  8. You have the right to be forgotten

    You can request deletion of your data. When you leave, your information leaves with you.

Our Commitment

These rights are not features that can be removed. They are foundational principles that define what MIR is. We build every system with these rights in mind, and we will never compromise them.